Netflix is expanding into Southern Europe

TECHi's Author Rocco Penn
Opposing Author Marketwatch Read Source Article
Last Updated Originally published June 7, 2015 · 7:20 PM EDT
Marketwatch View all Marketwatch Two Takes by TECHi Read the original story Published June 7, 2015 Updated January 30, 2024
TECHi's Take
Rocco Penn
Rocco Penn
  • Words 67
  • Estimated Read 1 min

Netflix has already conquered most of the Anglosphere and Latin America, and with its Asian expansion on the horizon, the company has decided to finish its European expansion. Starting later this year, the company will be offering its service in some of the developed, but less-connected parts of Western Europe, such as Italy and Spain. This is part of Netflix’s plan to operate in 200 countries before 2017. 

Marketwatch

Marketwatch

  • Words 194
  • Estimated Read 1 min
Read Article

Netflix Inc. will expand into in Italy, Portugal and Spain, pushing into a tier of less-connected Western European markets as it continues a global rollout. The Los Gatos, Calif. online-video subscription firm said that it will in October offer services that includes a catalog of older movies and TV shows, as well as some original programs including the forthcoming show about Pablo Escobar called “Narcos.” The launches continue a fast expansion that has boosted Netflix’s subscriber numbers but sapped its profit. Netflix says it will operate in 200 countries by the end of 2016, and aims for its international operations to be profitable beginning in 2017. But meanwhile, the cost of buying rights to run TV shows and movies, as well as to market its service against competitors, is taking a growing toll on the bottom line. International losses widened to $65 million in the first quarter of 2015, compared with $35 million a year earlier, after the company began offering service in several European countries including Germany and France last fall. In the most-recent period, it also added service in Australia, New Zealand and Cuba. The firm plans to add service in Japan in the fall as well.

Source

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

Balanced Perspective

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

TECHi’s editorial take above outlines the reasoning that supports this position.

More Two Takes from Marketwatch

Samsung is gonna have to start coughing up money to Nokia
Samsung is gonna have to start coughing up money to Nokia

Nokia may have (temporarily) pulled out of the handset market, but the company has spent more than $50 billion on research…

Panasonic is investing $1.6 billion in Tesla’s massive gigafactory
Panasonic is investing $1.6 billion in Tesla’s massive gigafactory

Panasonic is already a major player in the automotive electronics market, but it wants to make sure that the transition to…

Tesla continues to hire new employees by the boat load
Tesla continues to hire new employees by the boat load

Tesla is growing so quickly that it doesn't even have enough parking space for its employees, and it's not slowing…

Walmart has launched its own mobile payments service
Walmart has launched its own mobile payments service

There are thousands of Walmarts scattered across the country, so it's no surprise that companies like Apple and Google have…